That wasn't my experience on numerous cases. Thus why I wrote up the above story---"mother Kawasaki" is the one who stepped up and took care of it while the dealer really wanted to do what they could to stop it, or atleast not do anything "extra" to get past the almost constant first step of refusal to cover, seems to be a standard answer.
Back in 91-92? I had a 1991 ZX11, I rode the **** out of it and was about a week out of the 1 year warranty and back then 12,000 mile as well, well my bike had over 25,000 miles on it and on my way back to MN from Arizona it actually broke the crank in half, so two cylinders no longer had pistons moving up and down while 2 did.
I limped that thing over 500 miles to home (it was about 9pm at night when it happened and no way no how was anyone open and what could they have done anyhow?)
Anyways, net day I call the local dealer (my parts supplier for years and where I had bought numerous bikes) they say no way it will be covered, past warranty in both time and way over in miles.
I decided to try Kawi directly and after numerous attempts I finally got a live person who actually had some knowledge and he asked the right questions etc...
IN the end he had me take it to the local dealer~kawasaki warranty is only authorized through Kawasaki dealers~ (I already had it completely apart, so I only took the engine in) and they wrote up an estimate and I sent that to kawasaki corporate (directly to the guy I had talked with a week earlier) and he approved it. New crank, rods, bearings (full sets of every size available), rings, all the gaskets and seals, oil pumps, etc...pretty much every wear item in the engine.
I took my box o parts home and did the work myself, no doubt the dealer got paid for the work-but since they were so unhelpful on the situation and more than anything I didn't trust their ability to do the work to my standard. I was far happier to do it all myself, the retail $ amount on the parts was well over $2500 at the time (I suspect that puts dealer cost around $1300, and ma kawi likley to be well under $1k-so their cost to keep a loyal Kawasaki rider happy likely was mostly the labor credit to the dealer, but here I am 20+ years later and still riding Kawasaki's.
So my moral to the story is that ma kawasaki really wants to keep you as a happy customer even if sometimes the dealers do not.